Compress Images
Reduce image file sizes by up to 80% while maintaining visual quality. Perfect for web, email, and storage.
Free workspace
Keep optimized assets accessible when compression becomes repeat work.
Compress a file instantly here, then move into retained outputs, OCR, and starter workflows when your image pipeline needs more than a quick export.
Instant use
25 browser conversions / day
Retained files
7-day retained files
Secure processing
10 server jobs / month
Document tools
20 OCR pages / month
Compression surface
Reduce image weight without adding workflow friction.
The browser compressor stays fast for one-off optimization, while the wider FileMorf workspace handles retained outputs when the same asset work keeps coming back.
How it works
Compress, compare, and download in a few steps.
The flow stays short so you can optimize the file, check the result, and move on without setup overhead.
Upload Images
Drag and drop images in JPG, PNG, or WebP format.
Choose Compression
Select quality level. Lower quality = smaller files.
Download Compressed
Save your optimized images with before/after size comparison.
Why FileMorf
A cleaner compression route for everyday assets.
The tool is optimized for speed and privacy first, with enough depth to support real production handoffs once the work becomes recurring.
100% Private
All processing happens in your browser. Your files never leave your device.
Smart Compression
Intelligent algorithms reduce size while preserving visual quality where it matters.
Batch Processing
Convert multiple files at once. Download as a convenient ZIP file.
Details
The practical answers before you export.
The compression basics, plus the nearby routes people usually need next.
How much can file sizes be reduced?
Typical compression reduces files by 50-80% depending on the image content and chosen quality level. Photos compress well; graphics with solid colors less so.
Will compression affect image quality?
At 80%+ quality settings, most images show no visible difference. Lower settings may show artifacts, especially in gradients and detailed areas.
Which format should I use?
WebP offers the best compression for web use. JPG is best for photos. PNG is best for graphics with transparency or text.
Related routes
Keep moving through adjacent image work.
These are the next tools people usually need after compression.
Next step
Optimize the image now. Keep a workspace when the asset flow repeats.
Start with quick browser compression, then move into retained files, OCR, and secure processing when image work becomes part of a larger content pipeline.